VERIFY: What is Net Neutrality?

A concept that internet providers should have restricted control over how people use the web. It's the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) way of protecting an 'Open Internet.'

SOURCES:

Federal Communications Commission website

Harold Feld, Senior VP, Public Knowledge

Oxford English Dictionary

PROCESS:

Currently, the Federal Communications Commission, or FCC, restricts wireless providers like Comcast, Verizon, Cox or RCN, from 'throttling,' 'blocking,' or using 'paid prioritization.' It's the government's way of maintaining and protecting an 'open internet,' allowing consumers to decide how they surf the web.

That could change on December 14, when the FCC will vote on whether to eliminate government peacekeeping--'Net Neutrality'--and allow wireless providers to have free reign of the internet.

To understand why more than 22 million Americans have submitted comments against the repeal of Net Neutrality, it's important to define the key terms.

Net Neutrality- The principle that Internet service providers should enable access to all content and applications regardless of the source and without favoring or blocking particular products or websites. (Oxford English Dictionary)

Example: I can't decide which movie I want to watch. I check Amazon, HBO and Netflix to check my options. Comcast loads all three sites at roughly the same speed. Nothing is stuck buffering, nothing is blocked.

Example: Comcast decides to no longer let Netflix load--Netflix isn't paying them enough money to make it worth their while. I can only pick between Amazon and HBO.

Throttling- Broadband providers may not deliberately target some lawful internet traffic to be delivered to users more slowly than other traffic. (FCC)

Example:Comcast loads Amazon and HBO normally, but Netflix is stuck with a spinning wheel of doom.

Paid Prioritization- Broadband providers may not favor some internet traffic in exchange for consideration of any kind. Internet service providers are also banned from prioritizing content and services of their affiliates.

Example: Netflix struck a deal with Comcast and Comcast has decided to let Netflix content load three times as fast as HBO and Amazon content.

Ajit Pai, chairman of the FCC, announced his proposal to repeal Net Neutrality in April 2017.

"We can correct a past mistake by moving away from government control of the Internet," Pai wrote in an op-ed of The Los Angeles Times.

But not everyone thinks removing the internet from government purview is a good thing--like Harold Feld. Feld is VP at Public Knowledge, a lobbyist group that promotes freedom of expression and an open internet.

"This is like on any highway when you create a fast-lane, you take traffic away from everything else so right now everything's distributed along this one pipe--if we say this is the fast-lane this is prioritized there's that much less space for everyone else," Feld said.

If websites begin paying internet providers for faster service, there could be a kickback to consumers for a better browsing experience, or tiered services that mimic cable tv packages.

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